Discovering a Probable Family Branch through Cluster Research

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Program Type:

Genealogy, Skill Building

Age Group:

Adults
Registration for this event will be open from April 16, 2025 @ 12:00am to May 17, 2025 @ 9:00am.

Program Description

Event Details

As we embark on our research journeys, we tend to be very focused on our target research subject(s), families or events. We establish our research question and move forward to gather as much information as we can from all varieties of sources. 

What we sometimes overlook are the individuals and families that appear in sources relevant to our targeted search who appear as neighbors in census schedules, witnesses or sureties on marriage records, informants on death records, and associates documented in county court and probate records. 

It is most advantageous to “widen our net” as we research, to study potential extended family, neighbors and associates. These groups represent our ancestor’s cluster. We must expand our search activity to investigate potential family and associates as diligently as we research our direct and known family lines. 

Elizabeth Shown Mills calls this the FAN club – friends, associates and neighbors. 

Cluster research strategy involves investigating people who lived close to our families, engaged in business transactions with them, stood as witnesses or informants for them for marriages, estate proceedings and death certificates. 

We will explore a case study demonstrating cluster research.

Denyce Porter Peyton is a genealogist with almost 30 years’ experience, including 20 years as a professional. Her specialties are African Americans, research methodologies, evidence analysis and nineteenth/twentieth century investigations. Denyce lectures on diverse genealogical topics. She holds completion certificates from several genealogy institutes and workshops. 

She served as Project Director for the Reckoning, Inc, Kentucky U.S. Colored Troops research project and continues as a volunteer researcher. Denyce recently joined the board of Reckoning, Inc. 

She is a member of the African American Genealogy Group of Kentucky (AAGGKY), Afro- American Historical and Genealogical Society, National Genealogical Society, Association for Professional Genealogists, Ohio Genealogical Society, Kentucky Historical and Genealogical Societies, and Sons & Daughters of the United States Middle Passage. 

Denyce has ancestral roots from Henderson County, Kentucky, on her paternal side.

Disclaimer(s)

Photo Disclaimer

The Henderson County Public Library (HCPL) occasionally uses photographs and/or video of patrons in its publications such as brochures, newsletters, magazines, web and social media sites, display boards, or other non-HCPL publications. By attending this program, you are granting HCPL permission to use your and/or your child’s image for future promotional materials/content for the library. By attending, you also understand that once your image is posted on the Internet, the image can be downloaded. 

If you do not want your and/or your child’s photo taken, please contact Danielle Anguish for children’s programs at danguish@hcpl.org or (270) 826-3712 ext. 3. For teen programs please contact Glennese Patterson at gpatterson@hcpl.org or call (270) 826-3712 ext. 4.